December 19, 2011

Daniel "Rudy" Ruettiger Faces SEC Charges Over Pump-and-Dump Scam Involving Sports Drink Company

18 years after he was immortalized in the movie “Rudy,” Daniel Ruettiger and 12 others now face Securities and Exchange Commission charges. They are accused of misleading investor to get them to purchase stock in Ruettiger’s sports drink company Rudy Nutrition. Their alleged pump-and-dump scam resulted in over $11 million in illicit profits.

To settle the SEC securities charges, Ruettiger has consented to pay $382,866, while 10 of the others agreed to final judgments. By settling, they are not admitting to or denying any wrongdoing.

Per the SEC’s complaint, although Ruettiger’s sports drink company manufactured the drink called Rudy, Rudy Nutrition was actually a way for Ruettiger’s and his alleged co-conspirators to run their financial scheme. The Commission says that penny stock promoter Stephen DeCesare, who was brought in to turn Ruettiger’s company into a publicly traded one, was the main organizer of the pump stock scam. After Rudy Nutrition was given the ticker symbol RUNU, DeCesare and disbarred California attorney Kevin Quinn arranged for nominee entities to get three billion RUNU shares. The entities sold nearly one billion of them to investors through the public market. Other penny stock promoters then joined forces with DeCesare to engage in manipulative trading and fraudulent touting.

The SEC says that promoters involved in the pump-and-dump scam took part in manipulative trading so that Rudy Nutrition’s stock price would artificially inflate. Meantime, investors who were allegedly given misleading statements and false information through press releases about the company, as well as via promotional materials, were sold unregistered shares.

The misleading statements and bogus information were sent to millions via mailers, online chat rooms, and videos posted on the Internet. In less than four week, RUNU was trading 3 million shares (up from 720 shares). Within 14 days RUNU’s stock price went from a quarter to $1.05.

In September 2008, the SEC suspended trading because RUNU was delinquent with its periodic filings. This brought the pump-and-dump scam (the alleged fraudsters were conspiring to put out another two billion shares that they would dump at the end of the month) to a halt. The Commission took back Rudy Nutrition securities’ registration in November 2008.

Other participants slapped with SEC charges:
• Rocky Brandonisio, Rudy Nutrition President
• Stephen DeCesare, penny stock promoter
• Kevin Quinn, attorney and business consultant
• Kevin Kaplan, Rudy Nutrition CFO
• Pawl Dynkowski, stock promoter
• Mehmet Mustafoglu, Rudy Nutrition consultant
• Gregg Mulholland, stock promoter
• Joseph Padilla, ex-registered representative at Scottsdale Capital Advisors and stock promoter
• Andrea Ritchie, registered representative with Scottsdale Capital Advisers
• Gary Yocom, registered representative with Thomas Anthony and Associates
• Angelo Panetta, stock promoter
• Chad Smanjak, stock promoter

Pump-and-Dump Scams
Usually involves stocks that are promoted and then sold when the price goes up enough due to a rise in interest because of the endorsement. This allows those involved in running the pump and dump scheme to make a significant short-term profit.

SEC Complaint (PDF)


More Blog Posts:

FBI Arrests Texas Leader of Pump-and-Dump Scheme, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, March 23, 2011

Ex-Gilford Securities Broker Indicted in International Stock Fraud Scam Involving Pump and Dump of Israeli and Chinese Securities, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, February 19, 2011

Pump & Dump Scam Alleged in $600 Million Lawsuit Against Law Firm Baker & McKenzie, Institutional Investor Securities Blog, April 13, 2011

Continue reading "Daniel "Rudy" Ruettiger Faces SEC Charges Over Pump-and-Dump Scam Involving Sports Drink Company" »

March 23, 2011

FBI Arrests Texas Leader of Pump-and-Dump Scheme

FBI agents have arrested Christopher Rad, a Texas man who is charged with one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and transmit email messages. Rad, 42, is the alleged ringleader of an international securities fraud group accused of working with botnet operators, hackers, and email spam in a pump-and-dump scam.

Between November 2007 and February 2009, Rad allegedly acted as the middleman between computer experts, who know how to inflate a stock’s value, and stock promoters. The FBI says that he agreed to work with others to trade manipulated stock between themselves to make it appear as if the stocks were active. The hackers that he worked with would break into third-party brokerage accounts, liquidate the stocks, and use the balance to buy shares of the manipulated stock. They also allegedly distributed viruses so that computers around the world became infected. This created a “botnet,” a virtual army of computers that would then send out spam to promote the manipulated stocks. The pump-and-dump scheme let the fraudsters obtain control of “penny stocks" that weren’t traded on major exchanges.

If convicted, Rad end up behind bars for five years. He faces a $250,000 fine.

Another man charged over his involvement in the pump-and-dump scheme, James Bragg, has pleaded guilty to hiring botnet operators and taking part in massive email campaigns to inflate the stocks’ value. He also has admitted to bringing in spammers and hackers.

If you were the victim of a pump-and-dump scam or any other type of securities fraud, our Texas securities fraud lawyers want to talk to you.

Related Blog Posts:
Organizer of international securities fraud ring charged in stock manipulation conspiracy using hackers and botnet operators, Justice.gov, March 21, 2011

Texas ringleader of pump-and-dump scam arrested, SC Magazine, March 22, 2011

US man arrested in hacker stock fraud scheme, AFP/Google, March 22, 2011

More Blog Posts:
Alleged Pump and Dump Stock Manipulation Scam Leads to Indictment of Six, Including a Securities Attorney, Institutional Investors Securities Blog, February 27, 2011

Dallas-Based Southwest Securities Settles for $500,000 FINRA Charges It Improperly Used Paid Consultants, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, March 17, 2011

Texas Securities Fraud: SEC Halts Alleged Ponzi Scheme in the Dallas-Fort Worth Area, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, March 2, 2011

February 19, 2011

Ex-Gilford Securities Broker Indicted in International Stock Fraud Scam Involving Pump and Dump of Israeli and Chinese Securities

Gregg M. Berger, an ex-Gilford Securities broker, has been indicted for conspiracy over his alleged involvement in a global pump and dump stock fraud scheme involving thinly traded Israeli and Chinese securities. He is charged with wire fraud and securities fraud. The SEC has also filed related civil securities fraud charges against Berger, a number of other individuals, and three companies. The commission is seeking permanent injunctions, civil penalties, disgorgement, and a penny stock bar against Berger. Federal investors discovered the pump and dump scam following a multi-year probe.

According to prosecutors, between January 2005 and December 2007, Berger allegedly conspired with How Wai Hui, Francis A. Tribble, Scott Bradley, Alan Ralsky, and others to execute a stock scam that resulted in the sale of about 30 million shares of stock. Berger made over $600,000 in commissions and his co-conspirators generated about $30 million.

Defendants are accused of using spam emails to manipulate the thinly traded stocks. The recipients who bought the stock would drive the share price up and that is when Berger and co-conspirators would sell their shares at the new prices.

The indictment says that Berger was the stockbroker for the scam. He set up the brokerage accounts, arranged it so that stocks could be transferred to the accounts, executed the stock trades, transferred proceeds to specific bank accounts, provided confidential account information details to co-conspirators that were not supposed to receive this data, and did not obtain account holders’ consent. Stocks sold in the pump and dump scheme included those from Pingchuan Pharmaceutical Inc., China World Trade Corporation, World Wide Biotech and Pharmaceutical Co., China Digital Media Corporation, m-Wise, and China Mobility Solutions.


Related Web Resources:
SEC v. Berger, United States District Court, E.D. Michigan

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Gregg M.S. Berger, et al., Case No., 2:11-CV-10403 (RHC-PJK) (E.D. Mich.), SEC, February 1, 2011


More Blog Posts:
Dallas Securities Attorney and Former SEC Litigator Convicted of Fraud in Pump and Dump Stock Scam, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, February 11, 2010
Pump and Dump Scheme Involving Prime Time Stores Inc. Sends Global Spam Levels Up 30%, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, September 5, 2007

“Pump and Dump”, Annuities, Real Estate, Affinity Fraud and "Free Lunch Seminars" Are Top Scams in 2007 Say State Securities Regulators, Stockbroker Fraud Blog, May 21, 2007

Continue reading "Ex-Gilford Securities Broker Indicted in International Stock Fraud Scam Involving Pump and Dump of Israeli and Chinese Securities " »